Ohio History Journal

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THREE VALLANDIGHAM LETTERS, 1865

THREE VALLANDIGHAM LETTERS, 1865

 

CONTRIBUTED BY CHARLES H. COLEMAN

Associate Professor of History, The Eastern Illinois

State Teachers College, at Charleston

 

The two letters from Clement L. Vallandigham to

Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, are

from the Greeley Papers in the New York City Public

Library. The letter to James W. Wall, prominent New

Jersey "Peace Democrat," is from the manuscript col-

lection of the library of the New York Historical So-

ciety.

The first letter to Greeley, written in the interval

between Lee's surrender and the death of Lincoln, is of

interest as showing the turmoil in the mind of Vallan-

digham, leader of the "Peace Democrats" in Ohio and

in the nation. The Peace Democrats' thesis that the

South could not be conquered by force of arms was

rudely disproved by the collapse of the Army of North-

ern Virginia. In this letter Vallandigham is rationaliz-

ing the situation.

The second letter to Greeley, written shortly after

the death of Lincoln, is of interest as showing his fears

of a reign of terror directed against all opponents of the

Lincoln administration, Peace Democrats and "rebels"

alike. As a way out, he proposes to take a position

strikingly similar to the position he advocated in his

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