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THE DAILY 1EVIELV. JOS If. T. JAMES, Editor & Prop'r. WILMINGTON, N. C. THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1SST Eutcre'J at the Postoffiee at Wilmington, N. C, as Second Clsu-s Matter. More ineffectual ballots yesterday for U. S. Scnatoas in the New York Legis lature. The dead-lock gives no promise of being broken and we think that an ad journment will follow very soon. The objection to this, however, is the fear held by the Republicans that the next Leg islature will be Democratic and :but will bury half-breeds and Stalwarts iu one common grave. The hot weather, how ever, will, we. prophesy, prove a potent argument in favor of adjournment. Conk lincr is reported as still carrying a stiff upper lip. The aspect of affairs in Ireland is be coming worse and worse everyday. The Gladstone government has utterly failed in all that it has undertaken with regard to that sorely afflicted hnd. Evictions and arnsts con tiuue and thesi culmina ted in fearful riots on Tuesday. The report, not without Inundation, .. that llev. Father V. urpliy, of Scull, had been arrested, naturally threw the people ,r into a frenzy of fury. Riots followed, a police station was destroyed, telegraph wires were cut and the constabulary were attacked while on their rounds of eviction. lilood was shed, of course, and more troops have been found ne ?ary. Whit the event ual result vviil I..;, unless wiser " counsels prevail, it h as difficult as ever to fore see. L ME. MORI AM. ai iVA r nF tin: cosFEDKinrr. J.fiVrhOti D.tv HooU llyj'si, Which Will f r at ycral O.hcr fnllv nnrRnpd bv General Sherman. His force, united to that I bad assembled at Charlotte, would, it was believed, have been sufficient to vanquish any troops which the enemy had between us and the Mississippi river. . HH Ihm PAViilrv with which I left ( Miarlnttft hp.n associated . with a force large enough to inspire hope for the fu ture, instead of beiug discouraged by the surrender in their rear, it would probably have gone on, and, wheu united with the force.: ot Maury, Forrest and Taylor, in Alabama and Mississippi, have consti tuted an army large euouh to attract stragglers and revive the drooping epir its otthe country. Iu the worst view of the case it should have been able to . . J a V cross tne trans-.Mississippi aepanmcui, and there uniting the armies ot it. J. Smith and McGruder to form an army, which, in the portion of that country abounding in supplies and deficient la rivers and railroads could have continued the war until our enemy, foiled m the burDOse of subjugation, should in accord ance with his repeated declaration, have agreed on the basis of a return to the Union: to acknowledge tne constitu tional rights of the States and by a con vention or quasi treaty to guarantee se curity of person and property. Speaking of the Atlanta campaign ne says: lhe following wire among tne con siderations presented to General Jonn ston. at mv reaaest. bv Brigadier-Gen eral W. N. Pendleton, chief ot artillery of the army of northern Tirginia, on April 16, 1864: 1. To take the enemy at disadvantage while weakened, it is believed, by send ing troops to Virginia and having others still absent on furlough. 2. To break up his plans by. anticipa ting and frustrating hi3 combinations. 3. So to press him in his present posi tion as to prevent his heavier massing in Virginia. 4. To defeat him in battle and gain gpeat consequent strength in supplies, men and productive territory. 5. To prevent the waste of the army incident to inactivity. 6. To inspirit the troops and the coun try by success, and to discourage the enemy. 7. To obviate the necessity of falling back, which might probably occur if our antagonist be allowed to consummate his plans without molestation. General Johnson cordially approved of an aggressive movement, and informed me of hi3 purpose to make it as soon as reinforcements and supplies, then on the way, should reach him. As soon as rein forced he declared his purpose to ad vance to Ringgold, attack there, and, if The "Rise and Full of the L'outcder iy," by Jefferson Davis, has been giv . 11 I. . ".i to tne puoiie. ui meeting witn ex tended reviews from the press. We condense, but give sufficient to enable the reader to lorm some idea of the style and scope of the work. The author pay special attention to Gen. Joe Johnston, whom he holds re sponsible lor tne surrender, and tne con sequent failure of the Confederate cause. We quote: General Johnston communicated to me the substance of the above informa tion received by him from General Sher man, and asked for instructions. I have neither his telecrram nor my reply, but can give it substantially from memory. It was that he should retire with his cav alry and as many infantry as could be mounted upon draught horses, and some light artillery, the rest of the infantry to be disbanded and a place of rendez vous anpoiuted. It was unnecessary to say anything ot the route, as that had been previously agreed on and supplies placed on it for his retreating army. This order was disobeyed, and he sought an other interview with Sherman, to renew his attempt to reach an agreement for a termination ol hostilities. -x- On the 2Glh, the d.iv on which the armistice terminated, General Johustou again met General Shermau, who oflered the same terms which had been made at Cleveland, cut the railroad, control the river, and thus isolate East 1 ennes- see. and. as a consequence, force his an tagonist to give battle on this side of the Tennessee river. To enable General Johnston to repulse the hostile advance and assume the onensive no enort was spared on the part of tha government. Almost all the available military strength of the South and West in men and sup plies was pressed forward and placed at bis disposal, lhe troops, encouraged by the large accessions of strength which they saw arriving daily, and which they knew were marchmcr rapidlv to their support, were eager to advance and con fident in their power t achieve victory and recover the territory which they had lost. I heir position was such as to war rant the confident expectation of success tul resistance at least. Long, mountain ranges, penetrated by lew ana difficult roads and . paths, and deep and ; wide rivers, seemed to render our position one from which we could not be dislodged or turned, while that ot the enemy, depen dent for his supplies upon a single line of railroad from Nashville to the point where he was operating, was manifestly perilous.- lhe whole country shared the hope which the government entertained, that a decisive victory would soon be won in the mountains of Georgia, which would free the South and West from in lanta, where it would find neither natural nor artificial advantages of position." -He speaks freely; of the other Gener als, blames some of them for mistakes, but speaks kindly, makes bat brief ref erence to Gen.? Toombs, rather compli mentary,' and makes no attack upon Mr. Stephens. .. Of Albert Sydney Johnston he had a high opinion, and thinks the Confederacy received a mortal blow when he fell at ShiUh. He says: "Sydney Johnstoa fell' in sight of victory ; the hour he had waited for; the event he had planned for, had arrived, liis fame was vindicated, but far dearer than this to hi3 patriotic spirit wasriit with his dying eyes to be hold his country '8 -flag, .so lately droorl ing in disaster, triumphantly advancing. In his fall the great pillar of the South ern Confederacy was crushed, and be neath its fragments the best hopes of the Southwest lay buried. Not for the first time did the fate ol an army depend upon a single man, and the fortunes of a cosmtrv hang, as in a balance, on the achievements of a single army. , Take an example far from us in time and place, when Turehne had, after Months of successful maneuvering, final ly forced hi3 enemy into a position which gave assurance of victory, ana had marshalled his forces for a decisive bat 'I- 5 he wasi when making a prelimi nary reconnoissance, killed by a cnance shot. Then his successor, instead of at tacking, retreated, and all which one had gained for France the other lost. To take another example, not.quite so conclusive, it was epigramatically said by Lieutenant Kingsbury, when ,writing of the battle of i5uena Yista, that it the last shot, fired at the close of the second day's conlict, had killed General Taylor, the next morniug's sun would have risen upon the strange .spectacle of two amies in full retreat from each other, the field for which they had fought being iu possession of neither. The extracts which have been given .sufficiently prove that when General Johnston fell the Confederate army was so victorious that had the attack been vigorously pressed General Grant and his army before the setting of the sun would have been fugitives or prisoners. . I believe that again in the history of the war the fate of an array depended on one man; and more, that the fortunes of a country hung by the single thread of the life that was yielded on the field of Shiloh. It often happens that men do not prop erly value their richest gifts until taken away. Those who had erroneously and unjustly censured Johnston, convicted of their error by the grandeur of his reveal ed character, joined in the general lamen- IXiscollanGOUfl. successful, as he expected to be. to strike i tation over his loss, and malignity even was snencea by the devotee manner ot vasioa, would open to our occupation and the support of our armies the pro- duciti vp. tprrit.nrv nf IV nnpsipo anrl TTon ..i i i i. ..i I : . r ' . uu ucucui ic, aim nc - vcucr- tucky, and so recruit our army in the alJohnstonwithout hesitation, agreed West as" to render it impracticable for the enemy to accumulate additional forces in Virgini. After detailing the retreat of Johnston with his splendid ar my of nearly seventy thousand men from the strongest positions to be had. the author says: "When it became known tbat the array of Tennessee had been successtully driven from one strong posi tion to another until finally ithad reach ed the earth works constructed for the exterior defense of Atlanta, the Popular disappointment was extreme. The possi ble fall of the Gate Citv. with its im-' to, and we executed the following, which was the surrender of General. Johuston's troops, with the condition of their being parolled and the officers be ing permited to retain their sidearms private horses and baggage. It is true that these were the terms accepted by Lee, lAit the condition of the two armies was very different. Leete supplies iiau oecn cut, on., nis men were exhausted by fatigue and hunger, ho had no reinforcements in view. Notwith- A 1 . 1 - ? ' A sianu tne immease superiority in sum- oers nnu equipments or tne enemy pur suing he had from point to point fought portant railroad communication, vast them in rear and on both flanks, and had, the day before his line of retreat was closed, rejected the demand for surrender, and only yielded to it after his starving little army had been surrounded by masses through which he- tried to, but could not, cut his way. Johnston's line of retreat was open and supplies had been placed upon it. 11 is cavalry was superior to that of the ene my, as had been proved in every conflict between them. .Maury and Forrest and Taylor still had armies in the field not large, but6trong enough to have collect ed around them the men who had left Johnston's army and gone to their homes to escape a surrender, as well as these who under similar circumstances had left Lee. The show of continued resistance, 1 then believed, as I still do, would have overcome the depression which was spreading like a starless night over the country, and that the exhibition of a de- stores, factories for the manufactuie Of all sorts of military supplies, "rolling mills and foundries, was now contempla ted for the first time at its full value. and produced intense anxiety far and wide; irom many quarters, includincr such as had most urged his assignment, came delegations, petitions and letters urging me to remove Gen. Johnston from the command ef the armv and assign that important trust to some officer who would resolutely hold and defend Atlanta. While sharing in the keen sense of dis appointment at the .failure of the cam? faign which pervaded the whole country, was perhaps more apprehensive than others of the disasters likely to result from it, because I was in a position to estimate more accurately their probable extent. Still I resisted the steadily increasing pressure' which was brought to bear to induce me to revoke hi3 assignment, and only issued the order termination not to leave our political relieviner him from command hon T h future at the uiercy of an enemy which came satisfied that his declared purpose had for four years been striving to sub- to occupy the works at Atlanta with jugate the States would have led the militia levies and withdraw his army into Juited States authorities to do, as Air. the open country for freer operations Lincoln had indicated give any terms would inevitably result iri the loss oF that which might be found necessary speedily important point, and where retreat would iu termiuate the existing war. cease could not be foretold. If the army Had General Johnston obeyed the 0f Tennessee was found to be'.1-unable Jo order seut to him from Charlotte, and hold positions of great strength like moved on the route selected by himself, those at Dalton, Resaca, Etowa, Kenra J witii uil his cavalry, so ctucn oi tne in- J saw and on the Chattahoochee, -I could artillery, he could hot have been success- more successful ih'tne plains below" At- bis death. My estimation oi tint was based on long and intimate acquaint ance; beginning in our youth, it had grown with our growth without check or variation, and when he first arrived in .Richmond, was expressed to some friends yet living, in the wish that I had the power, by resigning, to transfer to him the Presidency of the Confederate States 01 the battle of Gettysburg Mr. Davis says: The battle of Gettysburg has .been' the subject of an unusual amount of discussion, and the enemy has made it a matter eff extraordinary exultation. As an affair of arms it was marked by mighty feats of valor, to which both cbmbatants may point with military jiridei. , It was a graceful thing in Presi dent jLihcohru, as reported, when was shown the steeps which the Northern men persistently held, he answered "I am proud to be the countryman of the men who assailed these heights-" The consequences of the battle have jastified the amount of attention it has received. It may be regarded as the most eventful struggle of the war. Bv it the drooping: spirit of the North was revived. Had their army been defeated there,' those having better opportunities to judge than 1, or any one who was among them, have believed it would have ended the war. On the other1 hand a drawn battle, where the army of North- era Virginia made an attack, impaired the confidence of the Southern people so iar as to give the malcontents a power to represent the government as neglect ing for Virginia the safety of the more Southern States. 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The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 9, 1881, edition 1
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