Ohio History Journal

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CLEMENT L

CLEMENT L. VALLANDIGHAM

 

 

BY W. H. VAN FOSSAN, LISBON, OHIO.

In my library is a pencil-marked volume of the miscellaneous

works of Sir Philip Sidney, Knt. It is not the contents of this

book, however, that leads me to refer to it, but the carefully

punctuated autograph of its purchaser: "C. L. Vallandigham,

London, Canada West, April 22, 1864."

Fifty years after, it may be of interest to ask, Who was this

man his followers called the "martyr in exile", the man who, in

part at least, occasioned the

writing of Edward Everett

Hale's  famous   patriotic

story which appeared at that

time, "A Man Without a

Country"?   Who was he

who made the Ohio cam-

paign of 1863 the most bit-

ter political fight in the his-

tory of the state and of

whom it was said that out-

side of the Confederate

armies opposition to the war

centered in him?  Let us

look to the causes of this

growing opposition and the

circumstances which made

Vallandigham its leader.

The dark days of this

middle period of the Civil

War had not yet passed. Grant was still besieging Vicksburg with-

out success. After the battle of Stone River, Rosecrans was inac-

tive and apparently helpless. Already Lee had invaded Maryland

and threats of a second invasion of the North were heard. There

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