Description:

Grant Ulysses 1822 - 1885 Gen. Grant orders Gen. Burnside to take from the train station to his headquarters, Congressman Ashley, who seven months earlier had introduced the bill which became the 13th Amendment outlawing slavery – word gets back to Grant that upon his return to Washington two days later, Ashley confidentially told friends that Meade is universally disliked by officers and many high ranking officers favor McClellan over Lincoln in the November election War-date Autograph Letter Signed "U.S. Grant," 1p, 7.75" x 4.75". City Point [Virginia], July 11, 1864. To Major General [Ambrose] Burnside. Minor insignificant flaws. Fine condition.

In full, "Please send a Ambulance to the rail road at the Hospital to await the arrival of the Cars there and take Mr. Ashley, M.C. to your Hd Qrs. U.S. Grant Lt. Gen."

On July 15, 1864, Major Thomas T. Eckert, Chief of the War Department's military telegraph in Washington, telegraphed Brig. Gen. John A. Rawlins, Grant's Chief of Staff, about a conversation he had just had with Ohio Congressman James M. Ashley who had returned from City Point. In part, "Mr. Ashley, member of Congress from Ohio, tells me confidentially that in an interview the other day with Butler, that officer showed him the order directing him to report to Fortress Monroe, and said he would be damned if he paid any attention to it; he did not receive orders from staff officers. Mr. Ashley tells me also that he found a good deal of discontent and mutinous spirit among staff officers of the Army of the Potomac. A good deal of McClellanism, he says, was manifested, especially by officers of very high rank. He tells me also that Meade is universally disliked by officers of every sort."

Seven months earlier, on December 13, 1863, Congressman Ashley had introduced the bill which became the 13th Amendment outlawing slavery: "A Bill To provide for submitting to the several States a proposition to amend the National Constitution prohibiting slavery or involuntary servitude in all the States, and in the Territories now owned, or which may hereafter be acquired, by the United States."

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